She's touring the facility/and picking up slack.--"For in much wisdom is much grief, and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow." Ecclesiastes 1:18--I once believed in causes too, I had my pointless point of view --Life went on no matter who was wrong or right

Because we like to ridicule these things, be shocked and disgusted by them, be entertained, sometimes live vicariously through them...(ie reality shows about the rich and spoiled...) Luckily it's easy to flip the switch off

Because we like to ridicule these things, be shocked and disgusted by them, be entertained, sometimes live vicariously through them...(ie reality shows about the rich and spoiled...) Luckily it's easy to flip the switch off

This describes my approach to the Housewives shows. I used to read and participate on TWOP, too, so I could get my real-life gossip fix about the ladies. It's addicting and a shame, really.

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She's touring the facility/and picking up slack.--"For in much wisdom is much grief, and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow." Ecclesiastes 1:18--I once believed in causes too, I had my pointless point of view --Life went on no matter who was wrong or right

I get curious if a bishop or synod will ever fully condemn these things.

Why should they? Wouldn't that constitute excessive intrusion into the daily lives of the faithful? Wouldn't that show undue lack of trust in the ability of the faithful to discern what's good for them? Why do we need the hierarchy telling us this on something as trivial as what we watch on TV?

Does anybody else think that these things are dragging down the moral, spiritual, & family structure of all society and the church?

You know what else drags down the moral and spiritual structure of the Church? Humans. What are we going to do, ban them from going to church?

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She's touring the facility/and picking up slack.--"For in much wisdom is much grief, and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow." Ecclesiastes 1:18--I once believed in causes too, I had my pointless point of view --Life went on no matter who was wrong or right

Because we like to ridicule these things, be shocked and disgusted by them, be entertained, sometimes live vicariously through them...(ie reality shows about the rich and spoiled...) Luckily it's easy to flip the switch off

Since our eyes are the lamp, do you feel these evil things leave an inscription into our souls even after the switch is off?

I get curious if a bishop or synod will ever fully condemn these things.

Why should they? Wouldn't that constitute excessive intrusion into the daily lives of the faithful? Wouldn't that show undue lack of trust in the ability of the faithful to discern what's good for them? Why do we need the hierarchy telling us this on something as trivial as what we watch on TV?

Condemning doesn't entirely mean "banishment".

I wonder if they will condemn the constant "programming" that their FLOCK watches. The sheep follow the Shepherd. The faithful do not discern because the faithful are entertained by the sins they witness, and the eye is the lamp of the body.

There are barely any television shows that do not contain at least one thing that I put in the original post. There's barely any mainstream music that does not contain these things either.

I just wonder if a synod will directly come out against main stream television, music - etc. Of course these technologies are great for virtuous uses, but we all know that BARELY happens. I think it would be fair to lump most of it together.....

For example:24 - contains violence, adultery, murder, cursing a brotherAmerican Idol - contains immodesty, songs with sinful messages, harsh judgmental attitudes, and laughing at other's misfortunesFriends - made light of adultery, homosexuality, ripped at the solidarity of matrimony, contained no family valuesSienfeld - made light of adultery, homosexuality, contained no family valuesHome Improvement - Where was God, church, faith, or prayer emphasized? Examples of rebellious teens, teen sex7th Heaven - A Christian family who had teens grow up living adulterous lives

All of these are just a few examples of mainstream television shows through the last 15ish years. They were filled with messages of sin (some worse than others). We don't hear about this stuff in Laura Ingalls books... (but sin all through the 70's series) At one time the world cried out because Elvis shook his hips... Have morals declined since the inception of television and sin filled musical lyrics on the faithful and society?